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9 Sentences With "editorialising"

How to use editorialising in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "editorialising" and check conjugation/comparative form for "editorialising". Mastering all the usages of "editorialising" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The problem is that the bulky "editorialising" is what shapes the love and sex at the centre of "War and Peace".
Mr Davies boasted to the Telegraph that adapting the tome into a neat six-hour script was "dead easy", and that the key to getting it down to size was "leaving out all the editorialising, the history and the philosophy and trying to incorporate it somehow into the drama".
Political editorialising for example will melodramatise the mistakes of an African president while sanctifying massacres initiated by leaders of powerful nations.
It seems to have been so challenging she gave up trying, and started editorialising like mad." The review concluded: "The book is littered with egregious howlers that wouldn’t last half an hour on Wikipedia. That this is the official history of a major institution written by a supposedly respected academic simply won’t do.
The Gnowangerup Times was published from Katanning, with J.F. Cullen as editor and publisher. It was one of a few local newspapers from the same publisher - the Tambellup Times had a similar publication range of 1912-1924. Cullen, the editor, had a penchant for editorialising about Australian federal politics, and commented on the state of the parliamentary politics.
Pattison, "The Background of Peire D'Alvernhe's Chantarai D'Aquest Trobadors", 29. The author of his vida, editorialising, considers his poems to have been the greatest until Giraut de Borneill and his melodies to have been the best ever. The anonymous biographer records that his information about Peire's later years comes from Dalfi d'Alvernha. It has been suggested that Dalfi was the author of the vida.
On 26 May 1942, after a heated debate, the Labour Party carried a resolution declaring the Government must lift the ban on the Daily Worker. The Daily Worker welcomed the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, editorialising "The employment of the new weapon on a substantial scale should expedite the surrender of Japan".Lawrence S. Wittner, The Struggle Against The Bomb: Volume One, One World Or None. Stanford, California, Stanford University Press, p.
Gates described Mackenzie's writing in The Life and Times of Martin Van Buren as difficult to understand because he did not describe events chronologically and listed hundreds of names and events with too many footnotes. He also relied upon illustrations and political events from that time period which were difficult to discern. When reporting on the 1846 New York State Constitutional Convention, Mackenzie preferred shorter articles that rarely exceeded two columns of text. He referred readers to other newspapers to get details of the convention and instead devoted his columns to editorialising the proceedings.
Bloch was not only interested in periods or aspects of history but in the importance of history as a subject, regardless of the period, of intellectual exercise. Davies writes, "he was certainly not afraid of repeating himself; and, unlike most English historians, he felt it his duty to reflect on the aims and purposes of history". Bloch considered it a mistake for the historian to confine himself overly rigidly to his own discipline. Much of his editorialising in Annales emphasised the importance of parallel evidence to be found in neighbouring fields of study, especially archaeology, ethnography, geography, literature, psychology, sociology, technology, air photography, ecology, pollen analysis and statistics.

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